7

Why do we use "es" for "usted" and "eres" for "tú"?

David G
  • 1,133
  • 4
  • 13
  • 22
  • Related: http://spanish.stackexchange.com/q/7/12, http://spanish.stackexchange.com/q/836/12, http://spanish.stackexchange.com/q/1427/12 – Flimzy Jan 31 '14 at 03:03
  • I encourage you specifically to read this question and its answers, as it explains how Usted is used, grammatically. – Flimzy Jan 31 '14 at 03:04
  • tú y usted is equivalent to the vous-tu in french. Tú is like an informal you (friends, couple, someone that you trust) and usted is like you (your boss, and acquaintances, people that you respect). – Airam Metal Jan 29 '14 at 19:33

3 Answers3

13

The word usted is derived from the ancient expression vuestra merced (your mercy), which was used to politely/formally address other people several centuries ago. When you addressed someone as vuestra merced, you were not directly addressing them, but something else ("their mercy"); hence the use of the 3rd person that has been kept to our days.

Many other languages resort to using the plural in their courtesy treatments, such as French (vous) or German (Sie). Even English, though this is masked nowadays. Originally, you was the plural of thou; but it was used so often as a courtesy treatment that the singular form (thou) was deprecated in regular use. This is the reason why, nowadays, English makes no difference between the singular and plural forms of the 2nd person.

Gorpik
  • 10,297
  • 1
  • 19
  • 45
4

Usted is equivalent to you (2nd person) in English but it uses the third person form of the verbs (like he, she, it) in Spanish.

presente verbo es: yo soy tú eres él es nosotros somos vosotros sois ellos son

Usted must use 'es'.

Esteban Saiz
  • 134
  • 3
3

"Tú" and "Usted" are the second personal-pronoun. Both of them.

We use "Tú" for friends, siblings, people of our age, sometimes younger people than us, or someone that we have confidence with,

With "Usted" we refer to older people than you, professors, maybe your parents and older familiars, or someone you don't have that much confidence with. It shows some respect for the person.

"Es" and "Eres" are the conjugation of the verb "Ser" ("To be"). We use "Es" with "Usted" and "Eres" with "Tú".

brb
  • 458
  • 2
  • 3